In a #justsaying sort of way, please don’t confuse the Cheapest place to get a Velar with the Best place to get a Velar.

As you’ll have gathered from this forum, the cars are sometimes prone to be temprementall and could need a trip (or several) back to the dealer.

This is where the quality of the dealer will come in to play. It is possible that you will find a high calibre dealer who, is also the cheapest, but to me you would be better off choosing the dealer based on their reputation, and how they deal with questions such as “how many courtesy cars do you have”, “can I look at the workshop and chat to the workshop manager”, “do you have some customer contacts who I can talk to about what they think of your dealership” and so on.

The salesman should know his stuff too, and you should ask him questions about who would look after you in the event of things not going to plan once you’ve bought the car.

If they are free and easy with their responses and you think you will get a good service from them, that’s the point at which you should engage them in meaningful discussions about price.

If you want to get a quote from Car Wow etc, then of course go back to them and see if they can match it. But if they can’t, you will have to decide whether you will be happy to go to another dealer who might not be so supportive and save a few quid, or accept that the overall package is right for you albeit not the cheapest.

In a #justsaying sort of way, please don’t confuse the Cheapest place to get a Velar with the Best place to get a Velar.

As you’ll have gathered from this forum, the cars are sometimes prone to be temprementall and could need a trip (or several) back to the dealer.

This is where the quality of the dealer will come in to play. It is possible that you will find a high calibre dealer who, is also the cheapest, but to me you would be better off choosing the dealer based on their reputation, and how they deal with questions such as “how many courtesy cars do you have”, “can I look at the workshop and chat to the workshop manager”, “do you have some customer contacts who I can talk to about what they think of your dealership” and so on.

The salesman should know his stuff too, and you should ask him questions about who would look after you in the event of things not going to plan once you’ve bought the car.

If they are free and easy with their responses and you think you will get a good service from them, that’s the point at which you should engage them in meaningful discussions about price.

If you want to get a quote from Car Wow etc, then of course go back to them and see if they can match it. But if they can’t, you will have to decide whether you will be happy to go to another dealer who might not be so supportive and save a few quid, or accept that the overall package is right for you albeit not the cheapest.

I speak from experience here!

Good luck with the search

Not at all relevant really lol.., I’d always go for the cheapest no matter what- you don’t have to take the car back there...

My cars going in for a sensor check in a few weeks in a completely different garage because where I bought from were dog shit